 1 edit | Performance Here's the image from their test..

Speedtest.net doesn't show proper latency. It's probably much lower than 70ms. |
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 | Xenophone, just a WAG that you were on the boat. Are they saying that the actual speeds might be somewhere in the neighborhood of what you experienced, with say +/- 300Kbps or so??
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 en102Canadian, eh? join:2001-01-26 Valencia, CA | reply to xenophon I'm sure it probably is... that's just to the nearest site (which is also hosted in the same city though). The main thing will be ... how well will it work with a lot of users on it? A handful of users across 4 sites is a demo, but not a stress test by any means. -- Canada = Hollywood North |
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 3 edits | It can be compared to EVDO. Sprint supplies about 1.4-3Mbps, maybe more to EVDO sites. Many are able to get 2Mbps at times but the average is 700k-1Mbps.
WiMAX sites will likely be supplied 10Mbps minimum, so the average will likely be 2-4Mbps, with peaks near 10Mbps with low usage and near a site.
btw, the image above isn't mine, it's from the article. |
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 | If it can be compared to EDVO, then I can assume like EDVO, there will be plenty of deadspots. On the Southside of Chicago, EDVO is notorius for being inconsistent. I can't see how this made frontpage of BBR. They took 12 people with laptops and a few with cell phones, put them in a virtually a straight line with minimal intrusions and got connectivity....great. Now lets see 1000 people with boundries from Lake to Van Buren and Michigan to Canal. The results will be totally different. -- Burn a tire, but make sure you buy that carbon offset! |
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 en102Canadian, eh? join:2001-01-26 Valencia, CA | reply to xenophon I've never used EVDO. UMTS/HSDPA works well for me though (~100 ms latency tethered to cell phone) -- Canada = Hollywood North |
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 1 edit | reply to S_engineer said by S_engineer:If it can be compared to EDVO, then I can assume like EDVO, there will be plenty of deadspots. On the Southside of Chicago, EDVO is notorius for being inconsistent. I can't see how this made frontpage of BBR. They took 12 people with laptops and a few with cell phones, put them in a virtually a straight line with minimal intrusions and got connectivity....great. Now lets see 1000 people with boundries from Lake to Van Buren and Michigan to Canal. The results will be totally different. Yeah, wireless broadband performance will ALWAYS vary widely. It's the nature of the beast. If you want to be stuck to wired broadband go for it. But I've dumped my cable modem for EVDO and never looked back, don't miss wired at all.
WiMAX will be even better and in more variety of devices. For WiMAX devices that use MIMO antennas, there will be less variance. But tower/site load will always be tough to manage as well for the carriers. |
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